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tv   The Ingraham Angle  FOX News  March 28, 2018 11:00pm-12:00am PDT

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up. we almost lost our house the way things are going. >> have you looked at the news, now things are worse. on the real news. >> sean: congratulations. we're always fair and balances. laura ingraham is in the house. >> handity. you're great. your interview with mercedes sclapp was awesome. she should be the next white house communications director. >> sean: she's aamazing love her. love matt. her kids are incredible. i think it would be a good choice. >> she should get that job. knows him and the terrain. >> sean: i be wouldn't want that for millions. even what you get paid. you get paid a lot. >> laura: i've seen that jet of yours. oh. thank so much sean. >> laura: i'm laura ingraham. this is the "the ingraham angle." orange county, california has become ground zero for an up
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rising against sanctuary state policies. one of the officials behind the fight is here tonight. plus, at last the watchdog for the department of justice is launching a probe into the alleged fisa abuses by obama administration officials. and anger mounts over the death of an unarmed black man by police officers in sacremento. how could this put liberal activists in a major bind. first, hollywood discovers america. that's the focus of tonight's "angle." on the as far as "roseanne" seems an unlikely conservative superhero. reviving her tv show. playing her old character. this time as a blue color trumpster dealing with liberal family members. >> i know so many families, you know that are divided over the
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election still and they still. like you know are fighting and stuff. so we wanted to show that. and how our family deals with it. and we all have the hope that people will start talking to each other again. because that's what we need. >> did you see joy bahar face in. >> laura: when the orange "roseanne" debuted. reagan was finishing the last year in office. nine seasons later. bill clinton was in the middle of the second term in office. my goodness. how things have changed for america in the interim. but, i have to tell you it didn't surprise me one bit. i think we predicted it last wednesday on the "angle" when ratings show "roseanne" absolutely had nabbed 18 million viewers with the debut. it is awesome. now, for years the entertainment industry has moved ever further to the left. pumping out films and television
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series that often or simply don't resonate with millions of americans with a slightly more traditional senseiblity. if producers pushed the envelope on political issues and sexual depictions even during the so-called family hours of television, well they mate have curried some favor with viewers on the coast. i'm telling you they lost many others. and the people they lost, they needed a reason to return to broadcast television. temperatures and last night, "roseanne" gave it to them. you i've long wondered why the decisionmakers of hollywood haven't seen the writing on the wall sooner. how is it goodbyes to deliver content that right off the bat half of country will be repelled by? remember, 14 years yag mel gibson "passion of the christ" premiere and wracked up $600 million in domestic and
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foreign box office. evangelicals and catholics flocked many seeing it more than one time. it was an absolute tour deforce. one would have thought that the industry would have seen that success and tried to replicate it, but they really didn't do that it is almost as if the entertainment executives forced them to look another way, and write off conservative success in their world as some strange anomaly. but roseanne bar took the audience seriously. she was willing to reflect who they are fairly. even their politics. >> i think the voices of working people is absent from television. i think we always had that. we have it again. there's nothing on television like it. it reminds me a lost when we first started there was nothing on television like our show. it is still that way.
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>> she's a true innovator and show trump voters are not monsters and deplorables, and no, they're not stupid. they're real people, with real dreams, who get into family fights and grapple with health crisis and money trouble. "the middle." that's at abc it. has been a big hit. another middle class family and go to church and love each other, no matter their dysfunction. who can forget, i loved "everybody loves raymond." that ran for nine hilarious seasons. remember tim allen in the "last man standing" which was curiously canceled last summer, despite that it out performed on friday nights. it too skewed conservative. let's face to. for too long many of you have felt increasingly isolated from
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the popular culture. because the popular culture seems to have nothing but ridicule and distain for you. so not surprisingly there was a pinned up yearning for the type of show that rows ann bar produced. real families. real problems. and real intrafamily political divide to provide real laughter. will the huge success of "roseanne" expect we can see similar efforts at other networks? i wouldn't hold your breath. over the years i've had the chance to meet some of the folks, whose job it is to green light these series. they actually admit that they have alienated a wide swath of the american public, but they don't really seem to care. they seem more worried what their friends and colleagues will think, maybe at cocktail parties and dinner parties, if they backed a conservative-themed show. despite all of the talk of
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diversity and inclusion. giving each other ribbons and awards. hollywood remains still one of the most intollerrant industries in the world. and try going on the tradition being known as openly conservative. good luck. the liberal dogma is extremely difficult to crack. and the powers that bemake exceptions once in a while. it is usually for only those stars with huge name i.d. like john victoria or sylvester stallone or roseaun herself. in the meantime millions of tv viewers are voting wir that eyeballs. they're looking forward to see where miss bar takes this working class narrative. maybe right up to 2020. and that's the "angle." we will unpack the reasons for this ratings bonanza in the scene and unscene and with
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raymond arroyo. the conservative enclave of orange county, california has become the epicenter of the fight over the golden state sanctuary policy. yesterday in an amazing move the orange county board of supervisors voted to condemn california sanctuary law and joining an u.s. justice department lawsuit claims the entire system is unconstitutional. joining us with reaction is orange county supervisor. michelle steele a legal immigrant, who get this, was called a racist "b" word over her willingness to cooperate with eyes and joe alioto-veronese a former criminal justice commissioner. great to see both of you. let's start with you, michelle. when i read what they said about you with your background, i would like to say i was surprised, but i wasn't. because if you buck the liberal trend in california on an issue
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like immigration. they feel like they have free license to call you any name in the book. tell us how your life has been in the 24 hours since this decision was made. >> oh, my god, i'm very happy about it. because i was the one to actually introduce the resolution. because our local police and law enforcements agents hands have been tied. we really have to work. as a supervisor. orange county has to be safe. so public safety comes first, but it was really interesting that you can hear i speak korean and japanese is my second language and english is my third and i went through the legal process and am a legal immigrant and racist with the "b" i was surprised but in asia when you are called these names, you have a long life. so i will have a long life. >> laura: joe, i want to go to you.
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i am sure you did not support it. >> of course not. >> i wish her a long life. >> laura: i'm not drag you do that of but that's horrific. i know you condemn that. let's talk about what's happened since the faceoff with the trump administration. california is seeing one large county, 3 million people revolt against them. do you blame orange county for voting the way they did? given that they don't want orange county to turn into san francisco. they don't want the hyperdermic on the street or the human feeses on the blocks and the homelessness problems and crime. what san francisco has double the rate of the state cram rate. >> acin san francisco defense. we don't want any of that stuff either. as far as what orange county is doing this i think is just another political stunt. it is like what the federal government is doing on the lawsuit. i question whether the
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supervisor ret solution will get past the attorneys on this. the lawsuit filed by i.c.e. was filed against the state of california on preeveryonion that federal preempts state law. i think it has been settled no one is arguing state law preempts fall law. i think the feds are saying we are failing by telling our citizens and state representatives not to enforce immigration law. and i think that i think the only way that the feds will win on that argument is if there is federal funding attached. otherwise i don't see them winning it. as far as orange county is concerned. preemption they don't have jurisdiction, because it is not their argument. >> laura: we will lose the viewing audience if we get in preemption. let's get to the nut of what's going on here. we have a resolution in orange county that now requires that you announce and michelle correct me. you announce when a prisoner is
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released you announce it so pem will know when they would be released. why would anyone be against that? >> in the last three months we had 172 criminal aliens were released on the streets. as a supervisor i already told you it is a public safety comes first. immigration is federal law. this is unconstitutional law in the state that they just created. they created between local and federal government working together. so this one has to be stopped. that's the reason that you jeff sessions sued and now we are joining jeff sessions. >> laura: let's boil this down, guys. this is about safety. this is about security. this is about the well-being of citizens. citizens of the united states and legal immigrants.
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joe. i want to play for you. this is the attorney general yesterday or the day before talking about this situation. let's watch. >> state law is state law. and it is my job to enforce state law. i will do so. and we want to make sure that every jurisdiction, including orange county understand what state laws requires of the people and the subdivisions of the state of california. >> does that mean the sheriff's department? >> i think i just answered that. >> laura: i'm picking this, because we have had these horrific crimes. an illegal alien rapes a 10-year-old girl does his time and is released. there are sanctuary politicians who believe that the federal government should not be notified. and that individual should be put back out on the street in a sanctuary state. joe is that what you're in favoro of? >> no. if you're talking about someone convicted, tried and convicted i
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am not one of those political people that believe that person should be back on the streets. >> laura: that's happening all the time. that to me is a violent criminal what we're talking about is due process. because a lot of people that the supervisor talking about released from jail. some released on bail or or. they are merely been arrested. not prosecuted and tried. and people in the united states, unfortunately for i.c.e. the 14th amendment applies. and it requires that people get due process before they're convicted before you say. >> laura: joe. they're in the country illegally. they're become. >> that's true. but that's eyes issue. that's eyes enforcement. ize i.c.e. can get them out of the country. >> laura: they are not citizens. this is not their country. they came in illegally and now
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want the red carpet rolled out. which i guess california does. michelle go ahead. >> we can go back to san francisco what happened. francisco sanchez who was convicted seven time and deported for five times. san francisco refused to transfer him to i.c.e. and kalely stanley was killed. this is what we want to prevent. that's why we want to get out of the sanctuary state and against sanctuary states so orange county can be safe. we always want to come safe first. so it put all of the list of inmates released the list is coming out in public, so everyone can see it. >> laura: freedom of information. >> and they will arrest her, it is almost ridiculous.
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>> laura: the sheriffs will get arrested and the illegals will get released. so the sheriff is trying to keep people safe. they will be arrested by the state. and the illegal immigrants get togo free. your final point. >> the sheriffs have to follow state law. if the orange county wants to challenge state law, they should file a separate lawsuit. young this is the right place. i think this is the political stunt. as far as the stanley case. a horrible circumstances. but. >> laura: i the facts on what happens. >> laura: how many americans have to be sacrificed for the fantasy open borders is a good thing? how many americans have to die in dui and brutalize and domestic buse and children horrible things done to them? how often does it have to happen, until people say no more? >> citizens and noncitizens are doing that. i.c.e. needs to force federal immigration rules.
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>> laura: california wants to put out the welcome mat. where homelessness crisis and the filth and the streets. the report that came out. if i'm san francisco i want to clean up the act you want to bring more people in who cause more problems. i don't understand that. i will never understand that. we're out of time. joe great segment. michelle we appreciate it. thank so much. up next the doj says it will investigate whether the fbi broke the law when it spied on their american citizens. will we finally get answers how obama fbi spied on the trump campaign? details ahead. stimate in 24 hou. my insurance company definitely doesn't have that... you can leave worry behind when liberty stands with you™
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>> laura: big news rattling washington. the department of justice picture isor general is investigating whether the fbi or the doj broke laws using fisa warrants to spy on a american citizen. most likely former trump advisor carter page. we first learned of the alleged abuses when the president declassified the intel emmemo house the fbi used an unverified dossier funded by the democrats
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to spy on mr. page. i've long said the inspector general is key to getting to the bottom ofge what happened. to discussed further let's bring in chairman bob goodlatte the republican from washington is reporting for the "washington examiner" and fox news contributor. news. congressman goodlatte, there has been a stonewalling taking place at the doj and the fbi for moss and months and months. i think you have 1.2 million documents. you have 3000 documents. maybe it is too many documents. maybe the copy machine is broken. what's the justification for this delay? >> well, the department does not have a good justification for the delay. the attorney general and the director of the fbi have both acknowledged that to me. they now say they are hard at workre getting those documents ready for us.
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the requirements of the is up pena i issued thursday is those documents get to us by next thursday and the meantime we are pleased that the inspector general has announced he also also look into this matter, by two things. one, the inspector general can't look from the same perspective of congress or an independent special council can. secondly the inspector general should get out his report with regard to the investigation he has been conducting for the past year, with regard to how the fbi handled the clinton e-mail investigation first. we need that information out now. and then he would go on and look at the other matter. in the meantime, we need the documents. we need them unredacted. >> laura: jeff sessions has come around on this. but man this has been going on. as my mother would say it has been going on for a long time. >> there's very little trustn
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among republicans in capitol hill and the justice department because it is going on a long time. paul ng ryan said the fbi was stonewalling theai intelligence committee months and months ago. >> laura: why does jeff sessions now see it as a problem? >> i think a couple of reasons the text between peter strong and lisa t page. a lot of those were handed over to the congress. a lot were redacted the justice department say they were having an affair. there was some personal stuff. we had to redact the personal stuff. well, a couple of members of the house judiciary committee have been going over to the justice department and looking at fuller version of thoseg texts and finding out some actually real, official material evidence was left out of those. it was redacted from the ones sent over. so there's zero trust there. i think that the fact that the judiciary committee is sending people over every day to look at this at the justice department has probably told the fbi.
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they're not going to give up. >> laura: chairman goodlatte, when crew think about these texts and news tonight broke that dennis mcdonea, of course the white house chief of staff for barack obama was mentioned. and at least one looks like more text between struck and page. and i guess the concern is what is this the concern is the white house was not just kept abreast of this investigation of the trump campaign, but you know you see it on-line. people are wondering were they directing it? and if so that's a big problem. >> it is a very big problem. we're not passing judgement on that at this point. but our point is, you can't make a decision in the congress about what is material over at the justice department. we have another example. we know that pert struck and lisa page were talking about a federal judge who was appointed
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to the nicer court. he said he's a friend. i will, meet with him. that's redacted as well. we don't know whether anything wrong took place in whatever conversations but it was material evidence withheld from us. byer redacting materials. >> yeah, that's judge contreras. >> there are too many instances of either an appearance of a conflict. perhaps an actually conflict. political affiliations. going back to hillary or the clinton foundation or ben roads and now this. the contreras is a friend of page and struck and that's not revealed and byron, i'm telling you. this gives everybody a sense of heightened concern that this investigation from the beginning was the insurance policy. it was an insurance poll suin the fallns of 2016. heavy forbid should something have happened with hillary or her health or maybe donald trump
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would win, even though they didn't think they would. when you see dennis mcdonea on those text. >> what givesou a lot of republicans problems is a lot of them thought. republican president republican congress then the justice department will cooperate with the republican congress. and that didn't happen. what they realized, what they were apparently constitutional progresstives and back covering. >> laura: it is called the flop. the deep state. >> the covering instinct so stroking, they were stronger than desire to comply. you have seen adversarial atmosphere between pem in the same party. >> laura: one other thing. we're a little over. senator bloom thal was on cnn. this was about the expulsion of the 60 russian diplomats. let's watch. >> do you give the president credit for what many say is a strong step. stronger than what president obama have done.
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>> i give the president credit for expelling 60 russian intelligence officers. i think that it is diminished in its force by the presidents failure to himself break his silence on vladmir putin, instead of pushing barb as aggressively as he should he congratulated putin on his election. >> they have to keep on this narrative it is russia, russia. chairman, you close it out. >> well, this is far beyond what a few democrats or a lot of democrats think about donald trump. this is about how the government, including possibly the white house and the obama administration, but certainly the federal bureau of investigation of the justice department may have subverted justice in the dramatically different way they handled the hillary clinton e-mail investigation and how they attempted to conduct an investigation into the trump
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campaign. it is stunning how that contrast takes place here. and both the republicans, democrats and independents. everyone should be concerned about this. because we don't want the same thing to happen in the next election. you can't have the most important law enforcement organization in the world conducting itself in the manner it did in 2016 and 2017. >> there's a lot more news coming tomorrow night. we'll bring that to you here on the "the ingrahamth angle." gentlemen, thankhe you. 18 million o people watched "roseanne" last night breaking all records. why did it work? seen and unseen straight ahead.
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>> this is the first dinner together we've had as a family we've had in a long time. let's try to survive it. first let's say gra >> first let's say grace. jackie, would you like to take a knee? >> i should have tried to understand why you voted the crazy way that you did.
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>> i should have understood that, you know you want the government to give everybody free healthcare, because you're good-hearted person, who can't do simple math. >> laura: as we mentioned at the top of the show. the "roseanne" generated enormous rating 18 million watched the show. funny what can happen when hollywood makes programming not don decenting towards half the country. >> joining in the seen and unseen. it isng author of the book "the lost act of wonders" in airplane back. and raymond arroyo. get a little wilder. fantastic. what's going on? this is massive? we predicted. >> this thing exploded and it exploded because it is a safe, fun place for people to have a political discussion. but i would caution people. "roseanne" is not a traditional conservative. i know she voted for trump. the character voted for trump, but if you peer beyond this. itit is a complicated family
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dealing with sur gassy. and a grandson who is cross-dressing. they're dealing with a lot of subplots. this is not straight down the middle conservatism, but that's what made it work. it is not predictable or but, i will tell you, look where it resonated and tulsa, oklahoma, cincinnati, ohio. 29% of thea, kansas city, missouri. 29% of that city. >> remember that "what's the matter with kansas." >> not much. >> it hit and resonated with middle america. >> laura: because middle america feels turned off, and tuned out to what's happening in the popular culture it. doesn't reflect who they are. >> no and this does. these are working class people trying to make ends meet and problems are hitting them and thehi american dream is not playing out the way it is supposed to. for a sense of context. 18 million watched this when "will and grace" premiered 10 million watched it and down to 4 million.
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>> the reboot of "will and grace." >> more people saw this than the stormy daniels interview. it is the highest demo. 18- >> laura: it reminds me of what happened when "duck dynasty" they were sitting at the table praying they cared about each other and fought and. it was traditional. a littleug bit of that. >> whether it is "roseanne" or blue bloods. that sense of this is real. this is authentic. "blood bloods." >> it is rebec' loves it. >> "blue bloods" it is like the new "dallas." sweet jesus ice cream in toronto. >> what is this? >> a lot of religious people are up in arms. and they want to boycott this. this is a canadian firm that is reaching out now into baltimore and minnesota. this is one of their ads. it looks like the little girl is a cannibal. look at thee logo. "sweet jesus" in most of the
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logo the sweet has an up sight down cross as the t. >> and you see that. >> laura: lovely. >> the lightning sign. that some say is a demonic skin referencing when lucifer fell from heaven like a lightning bolt. >> is it good ice can cream? >> i haven't and after watching the adds i'm not sure i want to they're really creepy. andsu many antichristian. they take bible verses and turn them on their ears. love is patient. love is kind, but you can't lick it above a chalas. >> laura: you can get away. it is always during holy week. you can get away trying to intimidate and silence christians. insoot them. intimidate talk show hosts. because we have a certain point of view some of us. the evidence effort to silence of deemene those you diagrees. >> the owners say we chose it because that was the explosive
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reaction when people tasted it. imagine if your reaction was holy holy mummed? >> could you put that in the mall of america? >> laura: susan rice and "obamas" are going to netflix. >> laura: what's her experience? her interviews on the sunday shows saying the video caused benghazi. >> the obama are going to netflix it.ix looks like a talk show about issues and michelle obama may be doing let's move type show. >> laura: she's in great shape. a lot of people are saying no netflix. drop netflix. i just don't like a lot of the shows. >> i don't like the politization. entertainment should be neutral common ground that's made "roseanne" stick.d. >> laura: will it hold next week? >> it will hold. >> "roseanne" did a huge
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following like "middle" and there's a built in audience if they stay true to the characters, which they have so far. which is outside of the political. >> laura: norman lear. i would like to hear what he has to say. >> "one day at ali time" was renewed with rita moreeno. >> laura: everything old is new again.s fresh out of ideas. go get "will wilder." my kids have all read it. up next, protests over the police shooting of an unarmed black man in sacremento. the full story in moments. pssst. what? i switched to geico and got more. more savings on car insurance? a-ha.
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>> laura: tensions are high in sacremento, california as protesters are demonstrating overer the shooting death of a 22-year-old black man stephane clark on march 18 twoferses fired at clark over 20 times in his grandparents backyard believed him to be an armed burglary suspect. police how to he had a gun, but was only holding a cellphone. the officer advise been placed on paid administrative leave. they have caused disruptions shutting down interstate 5 during rush hour last thursday. and on two occasions, block the block the entrance to the city nba stadium at the game the kings estimated 4000 were in attendance and in an arenas that holds 17,600.
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the city council meeting deinvolved into chaos with stephane clark shout progress fanty at the city mayor while demanding justice. let's bring in retired lapd detective mark fuhrman. walk us through the incident that night that resulted in this young man's death. 20 shots? i mean i'm not the expert, you are. but i find that to be appalling. >> well, we'll get to that, but i think it would be excessive for the situation we're in. i think what's interesting for everyone to understand is that this was a property crime that the officers were pursuing the suspect. a property crime where so far we only know that vehicle windows were broken and one sliding glass door. no actually people were involved as being victims. that's where we start.
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and an air unit was actually above the officers directing them, directed them to affront yard. initially they got the suspect to halt, but he took off running into a backyard. that backyard was his grandmother. now we pick up this whole incidentr' on a body cam of the officer. what is really interesting to me is the officers had a place of tactical advantage and cover at the corner of the house and they see the suspect, who is in the open and in tall grass. and they say let me see your hands and then, without even hesitation it is almost a let me see your hands gun, gun, gun and the fire starts. tactically i do not like the situation. the situation with the property crimeua escalating this rapidly
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with the advantage of cover for the officers. and an area that is above them using blur imaging to actually watch the whole situation. they were watching it unfold. >> they were watching it from abovet unfold. we saw the video. >> yes. so the suspect is not going to get away. i find it-- this is personal from my experience in lapd. our tactics would be get on the ground. flat with your arms out stretched.d. you don't ask a suspect to see his hands. this is exactly what he did. he showed you his hands. he had a cellphone. when you say gun, gun, gun the officer that said that, he might think that is a gun. he may take some tactical measure using deadly force at the ultimate tactical measure but the other officer also has
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to an serve a threat, before he can initiate deadly force himself. they have to be responsible each and every round that they fire. what they're seeing. but tactically it sounded like a rapid succession no let up to evaluate the situation or evaluate the suspect, if he was down. >> laura: so for our viewers. the police need to perceive an imminent threat of bodily harm to them in the situation to justify that use of force? is that what they. >> they do. lawyer in that moment establish? >> every officer. i'll give you an example, laura. if you have a suspect that is coming out of a bank robbery, and one officer says "gun." that doesn't mean the other 10 officers get to shoot. every officer has to see
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something that he deems to be the action of deadly force needs to be used to overcome that threat. it's not one person sees a gun and it is. o >> laura: i have to get on the race question. because the race question is what's motivating i think these protests. they're getting wild. people are very upset. and i would be upset if this were a relative of mine. but is race at the heart of this do you think? knowing what you know now? there was a black police officer and a white police officer? or is it perhaps bad policing. >> well, it would be pretty difficult to be a racial issue when the officers get aradio call and have an air unit directing them to a suspect with crimes and chasing them. they have no self initiated contact or the which suspect to choose or who would try to stop.
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at the moment of the shooting you have a black officer and a white officer. they act exactly the same. it would be very difficult to call it a racial incident. >> laura: mark fuhrman awesome as always. joy bayhar at it again. this time attack melannia. i'll respond next. so i'm not happy unless my hands are dirty. between running a business and four kids, we're busy. auto insurance, homeowner's insurance, life insurance policies. knowing that usaa will always have my back... that's just one less thing you have to worry about. i couldn't imagine going anywhere else. they're like a friend of the family. we are the cochran family, and we'll be usaa members for life. save by bundling usaa home and auto insurance. get a quote today.
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♪ >> laura: >> laura: joy bay har is like a fire hose of left wing nonsense. after be offending christians everywhere for their beliefs. the view liberal attack dog targeting melania trump. the stormy daniels not surprisingly captivated the president critic but ignored in the frenzy is the real impact this has on the presidents family, especially the first ladyad and their 12-year-old son baron. but in joy's twisted view expressing political opinions in the past for bids you from getting an ounce of empathy. >> they can't like her 100%. because she is like her husband. i interviewed her on the hln show. that's where we made news i asked do you think that obama was not born in this country.
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she's on the same page with him. on a lot of issues. so she's not off of the hook. >> the hln. it is also off the air. by the statement standard no one can ever let joy off the hook for her list of insane political opinions and controversies right? look this political hatred by association. >> joy is not alone. attacks against the trump family have become the left favorite recreational activity. iv vanka trump. the new book "women who work." not ironic. i know -- >> jared will do peace in the middle east. >> it is always strange a new york real estate zion and guy owns a newspaper will solve meat peace. >> to the trump junior story. got the tweet thing is such red meat for everybody to muck and ridicule. we'll let it speak for itself.
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>> laura: that's not a fraction of a fraction of them. i havee to stay on the air until next easter to play them all. hitting people on public policy have it. to crucify them for long ago or attack them for their last name neither fair near joyful. we'll be right back. my name is jeff sheldon,
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and i'm the founder of ugmonk. before shipstation it was crazy. it's great when you see a hundred orders come in, a hundred orders come in,
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but then you realize i've got a hundred orders i have to ship out. shipstation streamlined that wh the order data, the weights of , everything is seamlessly put into shipstation, so when we print the shipping ll everything's pretty much done. it's so much easier so now, we're ready, bring on t. shipstation. the number one ch of online sellers. go to shipstation.com/tv and get two months free. >> laura: before we go, a couple of tweets about tonight's show caught my eye. this twitter user wrote this about orange county getting tough on illegal immigrant criminals. "there are some great people in the oc. keep up the good fight because you are on the right side of the law and you will prevail." amy shared her thoughts on the "roseanne" reboot, tweeting, " "roseann was portraying trump followers as white trash. good writing but not positive." what's wrong with white trash?
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she's cool on the show. i like all of your opinions. keep tweeting me. shannon bream is up next. shannon has lindsey graham on friday will be a great show, as always. shannon? >> shannon: he spent the day with the president. he will fill us in on that, laura. thank you very much. let's get you caught up on three breaking stories tonight. the inspector general at the justice department is starting an investigation into what republicans contend is bias at the doj and fbi and the russia collision investigation and those fisa warrants. we are learning that president trump has fired his veterans affairs secretary dr. david shulkin. senior north and south korean officials are just launching high-level talks to set up a planned summit in april with president trump. team coverage tonight, tomlinson standing by at the pentagon with why dr. david shulkin was locked up into his -- let's go. we begin tonight with chief national correspondent ed henry following the new pressure on the fbi.

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